On the second day of opening the case for the prosecution, Elwen Evans QC took the jury through images of young girls contained in folders on Bridger's Acer laptop.

The folders, given names including X0 and X5, contained photographs of local young girls which he downloaded from Facebook, as well as some obscene content.

On the afternoon before April disappeared, the defendant viewed a pornographic cartoon of a young girl gagged and restrained as she was being raped, Miss Evans said.

She also showed the jury a number of internet searches the prosecution says were conducted on Bridger's laptop.

They included "British girl murdered in France", "ten year old girls naked", and "pictures of ten year old girls".

"Those are just some of the search terms found on the Acer laptop," Miss Evans said.

The prosecution's case is that April's murder was "sexually motivated".

Yesterday, Miss Evans told the court that Bridger is a "fantasist" who had "a clear interest" in child pornography and child murder cases.

There were images on the laptop of April and her half-sisters, aged 13 and 16, as well as those of murdered young girls including Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman from the Soham murder case, the jury heard.

Bridger, of Ceinws, denies abducting and murdering April and unlawfully disposing of and concealing her body with intent to pervert the course of justice.

The defendant, who claimed to have served in the SAS but was an abattoir worker, accepts he "probably killed" April in a car accident, but will say he "blanked out" afterwards and cannot remember what he did with her body.

The disappearance of April, who had cerebral palsy, sparked a massive outpouring of support for her family, and the biggest search operation in British policing history.

The jury was also shown a series of text messages sent and received by the defendant on that day.

A number were exchanged between Bridger and his ex-girlfriend Vicky Fenner and related to the break-up.

The first message from Fenner at 7.38am said "good bye" and "try to be happy but I just can't do it. Sorry I can't do it and maybe I'll see you around".

Bridger responded: "You were my life babe. My everything. I am still in love with you for what it's worth."

A series of texts are then exchanged in which Ms Fenner says she does not want anything from the house and that she does love the defendant but that she cannot carry on.